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The importance of thermal dissociation in CO2 microwave discharges investigated by power pulsing and rotational Raman scattering

Authors :
M.C.M. van de Sanden
T Tiny Verreycken
S Sander Nijdam
W.A. Bongers
Giel Berden
Jose M. Palomares Linares
Dirk van den Bekerom
Eddie van Veldhuizen
Gerard van Rooij
Plasma & Materials Processing
Elementary Processes in Gas Discharges
Extreme non-equilibrium plasmas
Source :
Plasma Sources Science and Technology, 28(5):055015. Institute of Physics, Plasma Sources Sciences and Technology, 28, Plasma Sources Science and Technology, 28, 055015, Plasma Sources Sciences and Technology, 28, 5
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The input power of a CO 2 microwave plasma is modulated at kHz rate in scans of duty cycle at constant average power to investigate gas heating dynamics and its relation to dissociation efficiency. Rotational temperature profiles obtained from rotational Raman scattering reveal peak temperatures of up to 3000 , while the edge temperature remains cold (500 ). During the plasma 'OFF'-period, the gas cools down convectively, but remains overall too hot to allow for strong overpopulation of vibrational modes (2200 in the core). Fast optical imaging monitors plasma volume variations and shows that power density scales with peak power. As dissociation scales with observed peak rotational temperature, it is concluded that thermal processes dominate. A simple 0D model is constructed which explains how higher power density favors dissociation over radial energy transport. Thermal decomposition is reviewed in relation to quenching oxygen radicals with vibrationally excited CO 2, to reflect on earlier reported record efficiencies of 90%.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09630252
Volume :
28
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plasma Sources Science and Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5dd818e74059744580e83104f33bf36d